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Query: EC:3.4.21.69 (
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16,337
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The use of L-asparaginase during remission induction in patients with leukemia is associated with coagulation abnormalities, which may present either as thrombosis or hemorrhage. However, because of the multiple pharmacologic and hematologic variables present in these patients, the exact contribution of L-asparaginase to these coagulation abnormalities is unclear. We studied platelet function and plasma coagulation parameters in 12 pediatric patients with acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) receiving daily L-asparaginase as a single agent when in complete remission. Changes in the prothrombin time (PT), partial
thromboplastin
time (PTT), and fibrinogen, while statistically significant, remained within or close to the normal range during the study. Platelet function also remained normal during the study. In contrast, levels of
protein C
antigen decreased to a mean of 42%, a significant change from pretreatment values. Levels of antithrombin III (AT III) were likewise depressed to 15 mg/dL (34% of pretreatment value). Despite these changes in the levels of physiologic inhibitors of coagulation, this schedule of L-asparaginase administration was associated with only rare clinical thrombosis, and this study suggests that the development of this complication may be dependent on the presence of additional factors.
...
PMID:Effect of L-asparaginase administration on coagulation and platelet function in children with leukemia. 357 67
A single chain glycopeptide with a molecular weight of approximately 37,000, an isoelectric point of 3.0 +/- 0.2 and a carbohydrate content of approximately 20% was isolated from the venom of the southern copperhead Agkistrodon contortrix contortrix. It was capable of converting zymogen
protein C
in plasma of man and various vertebrates into its activated form, a serine proteinase which exerts an anticoagulant effect. Conversion of the zymogen
protein C
into the active proteinase was demonstrated by measuring the prolongation of the activated partial
thromboplastin
time due to proteolytic degradation of factors Va and VIIIa by the activation product, as well as by direct measurement of the generated enzyme activity by means of a synthetic chromogenic substrate. Intravenous injection of the venom
protein C
activator into rabbits caused prolonged activated partial
thromboplastin
time. Repeated subcutaneous injections led to formation of an antibody which formed, with purified
protein C
activator as well as with crude A. contortrix venom, a precipitating complex devoid of
protein C
activator potency. As revealed by activity measurements and by immunodiffusion experiments, the venoms of various A. contortrix, A. bilineatus subspecies contain similar
protein C
activators.
...
PMID:Characterization of the protein C activator Protac from the venom of the southern copperhead (Agkistrodon contortrix) snake. 359 Feb 9
The investigation of many hemostatic defects in the newborn is limited by the lack of normal reference values. This study was designed to determine the postnatal development of the human coagulation system in the healthy full-term infant. Consecutive mothers of healthy full-term infants born at St Joseph's Hospital in the city of Hamilton were approached for consent. One hundred eighteen full-term infants (37 to 42 weeks' gestational age) were entered into the study. Demographic information and a 2-mL blood sample were obtained in the postnatal period on days 1, 5, 30, 90, and 180. Between 40 and 79 full-term infants were studied on each day for each of the coagulation tests. Plasma was fractionated and stored at -70 degrees C for batch assaying of the following tests: prothrombin time, activated partial
thromboplastin
time, thrombin clotting time, and factor assays (biologic): fibrinogen, II, V, VII, VIII, IX, X, XI, XII, and high-molecular weight kininogen. Factor XIII subunits A and S, von Willebrand factor, and the inhibitors antithrombin III, alpha 2-antiplasmin, alpha 2-macroglobulin, alpha 1-antitrypsin, C1 esterase inhibitor,
protein C
, and protein S were measured immunologically. Plasminogen, prekallikrein, and heparin cofactor II were measured by using chromogenic substrates. The large number of infants studied at each time point allowed us to determine the following: the range of normal for each test at five time points in the postnatal period; that coagulation tests vary with the postnatal age of the infant; that different coagulation factors show different postnatal patterns of maturation; and that near-adult values are achieved for most components by 6 months of life. In summary, this large cohort of infants studied consecutively in the postnatal period allowed us to determine the normal development of the human coagulation system in the full-term infant.
...
PMID:Development of the human coagulation system in the full-term infant. 359 64
Six coagulation proteins were measured in 79 consecutive patients referred to the coagulation service for suspected disseminated intravascular coagulation. Antithrombin III, plasminogen, and alpha 2-plasmin inhibitor were measured with fluorescent substrate assays. Fibronectin, prothrombin, and
protein C
were measured with electroimmunoassays. Using history and physical findings and the results of a coagulation screen (prothrombin time, partial
thromboplastin
time, fibrinogen, fibrin[ogen] degradation products, platelet count, and peripheral smear), the 79 patients were classified into five categories: no disseminated intravascular coagulation (n = 21), elevated fibrin(ogen) degradation products without other evidence of coagulopathy (n = 44), defibrination syndrome (n = 9), microangiopathic thrombocytopenic purpura (n = 4), and primary fibrinolysis (n = 1). Because the sensitivity and specificity of each of the proteins could not easily be compared, receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curves and areas under the ROC curves were calculated for each of the six proteins as well as for the tests of the coagulation screen. The ROC curves indicated that, apart from plasminogen, the other coagulation proteins provided little additional information about the classification of the coagulopathy.
...
PMID:Diagnostic efficacy of six plasma proteins in evaluating consumptive coagulopathies. Use of receiver operating characteristic curves to compare antithrombin III, plasminogen, alpha 2-plasmin inhibitor, fibronectin, prothrombin, and protein C. 376 44
In the previous paper, the methods of purification of placental coagulation inhibitor (PCI) were reported. This paper deals with the acting point of the PCI on the coagulation process. Prothrombin time, activated partial
thromboplastin
time, Russell's viper venom time, and recalcification time were all prolonged by PCI. Neither thrombin time nor Echis carinatus venom time was affected by PCI. Factors XII, XI, X, IX, VIII, VII and V were not inactivated by the incubation with PCI. PCI had no activities of fibrinolysis, antifibrinolysis and
protein Ca
. In the intrinsic pathways, activity of phospholipid seemed to be inhibited by PCI. The tissue
thromboplastin
activity was completely inactivated by incubation with PCI.
...
PMID:[Acting point of placental coagulation inhibitor]. 397 28
Fibrinolysis may be impaired in coronary heart disease patients. 20 coronary heart disease patients and 10 control subjects were examined for tissue-plasminogen activator activity, tissue-plasminogen activator antigen, fast tissue-plasminogen activator inhibitor and other fibrinolytic and haemostatic parameters including antigenic and functional
protein C
. Both patient and control groups were similar in age and smoking habits. All of these patients had a myocardial infarction between 1-3 months before this study. Assays were evaluated before and after an exercise test. Prothrombin time, activated partial
thromboplastin
time,
protein C
, plasminogen, alpha 2-antiplasmin, fibrinogen/fibrin degradation products and contact-activated fibrinolysis were similar before and after exercise in both groups. Fibrinolytic activity assayed by the euglobulin lysis time and fibrin-plate lysis methods was decreased in the patient group as compared with the control group but the difference was not significant. In basal conditions, tissue-plasminogen activator activity was defective in 50% of the coronary heart disease patients (p less than 0.01) and after exercise this percentage rose to 77% (p less than 0.01). However, tissue-plasminogen activator antigen in the coronary heart disease group was similar to that of the control group, both before and after exercise. The activity of the tissue-plasminogen activator inhibitor was persistently increased in coronary heart disease though this increase was not statistically significant. It is concluded that in coronary heart disease patients there is a defective fibrinolytic activity probably due to an increase in tissue-plasminogen activator inhibitor.
...
PMID:Reduced fibrinolytic activity in coronary heart disease in basal conditions and after exercise. 408 14
An endothelial cell-associated cofactor that greatly enhances the rate of
protein C
activation by thrombin has recently been described. The observation that the cofactor binds thrombin with unusually high affinity (K(d) = 0.5 nM) suggested that low level thrombin infusion into dogs might lead to the selective activation of
protein C
. Infusion of thrombin (1 U/min per kg body wt) into the jugular vein of dogs leads to the formation of a systemic anticoagulant activity within 5 min of starting the infusion. The plasma has a prolonged partial
thromboplastin
time and Factor X(a) clotting time, but there is no change in the thrombin clotting time. The systemic anticoagulant activity is identified as
activated protein C
for the following reasons: (a) anti-canine
activated protein C
IgG antibodies inhibit the anticoagulant activity; (b) the anticoagulant activity can be partially purified from the plasma of dogs infused with thrombin by barium citrate adsorption; (c) the anticoagulant has chromatographic properties on QAE Sephadex indistinguishable from those of
activated protein C
, and (d) the rate at which this anticoagulant is inhibited in citrated canine plasma is identical to that of canine
activated protein C
. The in vivo activation of
protein C
appears to be receptor mediated since it occurs at low thrombin concentration and since it can be progressively inhibited by simultaneous infusion of diisopropylphospho-thrombin with thrombin. The activation of
protein C
at low levels of thrombin is selective, since neither the platelet count nor the Factor V levels are altered. Thrombin infusion leads to an elevation in circulating plasminogen activator levels. This appears to be mediated through the activation of
protein C
since coinfusion of diisopropylphospho-thrombin with thrombin inhibits the increase in plasminogen activator levels. Pretreatment of dogs with dicumarol blocks both the formation of anticoagulant activity and the rise in plasminogen activator. When the dicumarol-treated dogs are supplemented with isolated
protein C
and thrombin is infused, the anticoagulant activity again appears and the circulating levels of plasminogen activator are again elevated. These studies illustrate that low levels of thrombin in vivo can activate
protein C
, which in turn can inhibit blood coagulation and initiate fibrinolysis by elevating circulating plasminogen activator levels.
...
PMID:Activation of protein C in vivo. 617 16
Protein C inhibitor was isolated from human plasma using conventional chromatographic technique consisting of barium citrate adsorption, polyethylene glycol fractionation, DEAE-Sepharose CL-6B treatment, ammonium sulfate fractionation, dextran sulfate-agarose chromatography, gel filtration on ACA-44, and DEAE-Sephacel chromatography. The purified protein C inhibitor is a single polypeptide chain with an apparent Mr = 57,000 on sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. The inhibitor is heterogeneous in pI: six pIs exist between pH 7.4 and 8.6. The inhibitor was shown to be different from the already known plasma protease inhibitors by chemical and immunological analyses. It migrates to the late alpha 1-globulin region on agarose gel electrophoresis. The inhibitor reduced the amidolytic activity of
activated protein C
noncompetitively by forming a 1:1 molar complex with the enzyme, determined by the use of a fluorogenic substrate toward
activated protein C
(Boc-Leu-Ser-Thr-Arg-4-methylcoumaryl-7-amide). The inhibition constant (Ki) of the inhibitor against
activated protein C
was 5.8 x 10(-8) M. The inhibitor also blocked the prolongation of activated partial
thromboplastin
time by
activated protein C
. The immunoglobulin which was produced by the inhibitor completely removed the inhibitory activity present in normal human plasma against
activated protein C
. This suggests that the inhibitor which we have isolated is the only inhibitor in plasma against
activated protein C
.
...
PMID:Protein C inhibitor. Purification from human plasma and characterization. 629 98
Protein C
is a circulating proenzyme which, upon activation, exerts a potent anticoagulant activity. Infusion of activated bovine
protein C
into dogs is accompanied by an increase of circulating tissue plasminogen activator (PA) activity. However, the evidence that human
protein C
shares a similar profibrinolytic capacity is still lacking. Therefore, we investigated the profibrinolytic properties of human
protein C
in squirrel monkeys (Samiri sciureus). Injection of activated human
protein C
resulted in prolongation of the activated partial
thromboplastin
time but was not associated with increased fibrinolytic activity of blood. Similarly, activation of endogenous
protein C
(up to 20-30%) by infusion of thrombin-thrombomodulin complex markedly reduced blood coagulability without being accompanied by an increase of circulating PA activity. The in vivo-generated anticoagulant activity was identified as
activated protein C
by the following observations. It was neutralized by rabbit anti-human
protein C
-IgG, was slowly inhibited by plasma but not by anti-thrombin III, was adsorbable on barium citrate, and expressed amidolytic activity. Activation of
protein C
appeared to be selective since other parameters such as thrombin time, platelet count, fibrinogen, and factor V levels were unaffected by thrombin-thrombomodulin infusion. Infusion of human plasma derived from whole blood incubated in vitro with human
activated protein C
also did not induce a fibrinolytic response, suggesting that no second messengers with PA-releasing activity were being generated in blood. It is concluded that in a primate, neither the administration of activated human
protein C
nor the activation of endogenous
protein C
are associated with an increase of fibrinolytic activity. These findings question the role of this enzyme in the regulation of PA release in man.
...
PMID:Influence of protein C activation on blood coagulation and fibrinolysis in squirrel monkeys. 654 56
HeLa cells have undetectable tissue factor (
thromboplastin
) activity when measured by a one-stage coagulation assay. In contrast, these cells accelerated the factor VII-catalyzed cleavage of factor X. The two assays gave similar results after either heating the samples to 100 degrees C for 2 min or exposure to thrombin. Neither of these treatments altered the tissue factor activity of human foreskin fibroblasts, a cell type with high tissue factor activity. HeLa cells contain an inhibitor(s) directed against factor Xa but not thrombin. The inhibitor(s) was inactivated by exposure to thrombin or by heat treatment. Inhibition of factor Xa-catalyzed cleavage of a synthetic peptide was blocked by ethyleneglycol bis(beta-aminoethyl ether)-N,N'-tetraacetic acid (EGTA) so the inhibition was apparently dependent on divalent cations. Inhibition was not accelerated by heparin. The inhibitor(s) was not
protein C
or other serine proteases since it was not inactivated by diisopropylfluorophosphate. The factor Xa inhibitor(s) has been isolated from HeLa cells with an approximate 500-fold increase in specific activity. After SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis factor Xa-inhibitory activity was recovered from a region corresponding to the major Coomassie-staining band at 43 kDa and in lesser amounts from regions corresponding to 26 and 17 kDa. Cellular inhibitors of coagulation may partially explain the low apparent tissue factor observed in some in vitro cells and may serve a regulatory role in limiting the expression of tissue factor.
...
PMID:Alterations in the apparent tissue factor (thromboplastin) expression in HeLa cells by a cellular factor Xa inhibitor. 663 60
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